Friday, 23 December 2022

Some photos from recent picket lines involving GMB, UNISON, PCS, RMT, CWU and Unite members in the Halifax area and Oldham and Liverpool - victory to all of them.




                                              Ambulance workers picket line in Halifax 


Ambulance strike poster 

                                                 Mizkan strikers of Unite the union in Oldham 
It was a bitterly cold day but nearly 90% of those on strike were on the picket line 
Mohammad Taj, former bus driver and TUC President, was there to show his support. He later spoke to all workers at a brief rally and afterwards donated £50 to the strike fund. To be in Taj's company is a joy. 
                                    PCS strikers at the PVSA on 19 December in Halifax 
                                                         PCS strikers on 20 December. Some of the strikers from Bradford were delighted to get copies of the booklet on Mohammad Taj. 

CWU members and supporters at Hebden Bridge on 23 December. Dave McGarry, solidarity fist at back bought Images of the Miners' Strike by Martin Jenkinson and myself for Christine (front row and far left) for Xmas as she's a great lass. 


                                                     RMT at Huddersfield in August. (I should have taken photo earlier)





CWU picket line in Halifax in December. Good lads and lasses. 

CWU strikers in Halifax listening to Mohammad Taj, retired bus driver and TUC President in 2013/14. Calderdale Trades Council banner - it has had a few outings this year - in the background. Kevin, Daniel, Jackie, Peter, Chris and myself have all been regulars at the picket lines. 


CWU members on strike in Halifax, in the middle is shop steward Claire and she's a tower of strength. 



                                                CWU strikers in Halifax. Brave bunch. Victory to them.


                                      Quorn strikers in Billingham. Unite (d) in action.
                                                                        Solidarity. 
                                                     Explaining their case to tanker drivers. 


                                                        Quorn strikers banner 









Friday, 16 December 2022

REACHING NEW PEAKS

 

A new proposal to reopen the Peaks and Dales railway Line aims to revive local rural communities in the Peak District National Park

When future England international Frank Swift debuted for Manchester City on Xmas Day 1933 at Derby County he joined his team mates on the direct train journey via Bakewell from Manchester to the east Midlands railway town

It is a trip not possible today after parts of the rail track around Buxton and Matlock were removed in 1968, five years after the Beeching Report acted as the catalyst for the destruction of much of the railway network.

Now, Manchester and East Midlands Rail Action Partnership (MEMRAP) has been formed with the aim of re-opening the line for passenger and freight traffic.

MEMRAP would welcome the backing of local trade unionists and longer term hopes that unions will join them in lobbying major politicians.

When I joined retired Chartered Accountant Stephen Chaytow, who inspired the setting up of MEMRAP after he moved 4 years ago from London, he was handing out leaflets to visitors, the large majority of whom had arrived by car before going cycling or walking on the hillsides, at the former Millers Dale train station. The response by the public to his “it will be a new trail, a new railway, you can leave your car at home and bikes go in a bike garage,” was overwhelmingly positive.

Why has MEMRAP been set up?

“There is an ongoing economic decline in Derbyshire because of the absence of this key infrastructure,” he explained. There seems to be a culture that nothing can be done. That’s not so and we need to offer a better economic and more sustainable future for the county and its residents.

“We are currently concentrating on leafleting to let people, and their elected representatives, know our aims.  I think politicians are starting to be asked their views by electors. There is a well-worn trail of studies, public consultation and technical work to conclude before we can hope to get parliamentary blessing for a Transport and Works Act Order. It would cost around a billion pounds as the work includes 13 miles of new track and 23 miles of upgraded track plus slightly moving the Monsal trail”.

All of which will take, at least, a decade especially as reopening the railway line would involve reconstructing the Monsal Trail, which is a traffic free route for walkers, cyclists, horse riders and wheelchair users through some of the Peak District's most spectacular limestone dales. The trail runs along the former Midland Railway line for 8.5 miles between Blackwell Mill, in Chee Dale and Coombs Road, at Bakewell.

What similar campaigns have you drawn inspiration from?

 “The Borders Rail project has brought new connectivity to the declining areas of the Scottish Borders with the town centre of Galashiels prospering whilst a few miles down the road, Hawick, without rail connectivity, remains in decline”.

How will local communities benefit?

Our canvassing has shown residents want to be able to travel for Manchester for jobs, family and social events,” reports Stephen. “ It would take an hour by train. Locally, there are few big businesses and that’s due, in part, to transport problems. A new road would not be tolerated and rail is the only option. It will level Derbyshire up to locations elsewhere, encourage businesses to move here and thus create more jobs.

“Meanwhile, visitor traffic clogs up National Park roads and rail will encourage people to make the journey by rail. We believe there can be a 40% drop in road traffic. There are many trucks from working quarries and we believe their products could be transferred to the new rail track.”

And what benefits will there be for rail travellers?

“Many travellers avoid rail when moving between the East Midlands and the North West. The mix of proposed new stations (all with dedicated bike carriages) through the National Park, semi fast and fast train services is tailored to the needs of a population that wants to make less use of its cars but is denied today.

The track will mean that trains can run from London St Pancras to Derby and on to Manchester and this in essence means the country will have a new mainline rail service at just a billion pounds”.

Can Landworker readers support the project?

“Yes and significant support from trade unions could be pivotal to influence politicians – and this is a cross party matter, something I have learned from Labour and Conservative alike, due to the long lived nature of such a project.

“Trade unionists can join MEMRAP, they can write to representatives from Stockport to Leicester, via Matlock and Derby and we would welcome union financial support as we are an unfunded group. We would be happy to speak at union events, take questions and get people’s views,” concluded Stephen.

REIGN OF TERROR Charged: How the Police Try to Suppress Protest.

 

REIGN OF TERROR

Charged: How the Police Try to Suppress Protest. By Matt Foot and Morag Livingston, published by Verso (£18.99 RRP)

This is a highly informative book investigation examining a series of protest events dating back over four decades, exposing gross state abuses by the police and legal system, government and politicians of all major parties.

It is essential reading today because the government has given the police frightening new powers which they expect them to use against trade unionists and other progressive organisations fighting back against the cost of living crisis, rising inequality and the loss of rights at work. Ironically, it means the right to effectively protest will only be maintained by protesting!

There is a long history here going back to 1968 when the Special Demonstration Squad (SDS) was started within the Metropolitan Police (Met) to spy on tens of thousands of citizens.

But things began to get really nasty during the decade of Thatcher – the 1980s.

Following widespread rioting in 1981 in St Pauls in Bristol, Toxteth in Liverpool and Brixton in London, Willie Whitelaw, Conservative Home Secretary, commissioned Lord Scarman, who had a liberal reputation from chairing previous inquiries of disorder, to undertake an inquiry into the causes . Scarman was to recommend greater community policing and Whitelaw backed him.

Secretly though, Whitelaw and the under pressure Thatcher government – whose destruction of major industries had sent unemployment rocketing - were gearing up through Kenneth Oxford, the new Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) leader, to import policing tactics. These had been refined during Britain’s many colonial experiences. An officer from Hong Kong there, where paramilitary methods were employed for crowd control, presented a manual, which was warmly welcomed, to ACPO’s annual conference.

What was happening was the most significant shift in policing strategy in over a century. Yet it was never even debated in Parliament.

The new rules only came to light during the 1985 Orgreave trials of striking miners charged with riot ‘when defence barrister Michael Mansfield’s forensic cross-examination of ACC Anthony Clement’ revealed them. Clement claimed the manual did not cover public disorder in an industrial dispute. Home Office files released 3 decades later showed Clement was wrong. Striking miners at Orgreave had horses and dogs used against them and which ACPO justified because of the ‘potential for disorder’.

Mansfield immediately sought the manual’s disclosure. This was resisted although the judge did order some pages to be provided including those on use of arrest squads, mounted police and the deployment of shields and truncheons. MP Tony Benn’s attempts request for a Parliamentary debate on the manual were refused and decades later the full contents of the manual remain secret.

Such levels of secrecy had earlier been employed in 1968 when the SDS spy cops                                                         began to embed themselves in the anti-war movement before later lodging themselves in other movements where they collected information on tens of thousands of citizens, few of whom were committed to anything except peaceful, legal protests and campaigns.

Knowing that their new powers had been instigated by the home secretary and his department for the government’s political ends meant that senior police officers could prioritise these brutal new powers over any thoughts for more liberal policing.

At the Stockport Messenger group in Warrington in 1983, members of the National Graphical Association took strike action to defend their jobs and the right to belong to a trade union.

They were to become the guinea pigs in the tactical uses of the Public Order Manual of Tactical Options and Related Matters. It was to be a terrifying experience for trade unionists who defied the new anti-union laws by picketing, not at the place of work where the dispute in which 6 workers had been sacked, but at a new plant where the work had been transferred to by Eddie Shah, a maverick entrepreneur who was backed by the Sunday Times editor Andrew Neil.

Early on Wednesday 30 November 1983, up to 4,000 pickets, who were infiltrated by the SDS, were opposed by over 1,450 police officers. When the police instructed television crews to ‘turn off the lights’ the police then charged the crowd on 3 separate occasions . Two police Range Rovers were driven at high speed into the pickets, some of whom were kicked and hit with batons as they lay on the ground. The use of vehicles had been authorised in the Public Order Manual. Tony Burke and many others suspected the police had the full weight of the state behind them but recalls, “People didn’t necessarily believe they would go this far.” The union made a complaint against ACPO-rank officers but it took two years before the NGA received the not unexpected news that the complaints were not upheld.

It was to be the same when striking print workers, who were infiltrated by spy cop Bob Lambert, at Wapping, made complaints about the violent behaviour of the Met in relation to their actions outside Rupert Murdoch’s new printing plant in East London during the year long dispute in the mid-80s.

On this occasion the Criminal Prosecution Service viewed the actions of twenty-six police officers as so serious that they were charged. Yet when they appeared at committal hearings in the magistrate’s court before resident magistrate Ronald Bartle, former Tory candidate, an audacious defence submission that a fair trial was not possible because of delays in getting the first case to court was accepted.

Bartle in his book Bow Street Beak claimed the ‘judiciary is independent of the executive’ and yet the foreword to the work was written by his lifelong friend Lord Hurd, the Home Secretary during the Wapping strike who had privately met police commissioner Sir Peter Imbert in December 1988 in an attempt to stop the prosecutions.

All 26 Wapping Officers had their cases thrown out and walked away scot-free. Calls for a public inquiry into policing operations were dismissed.

Violence against demonstrators continued when tens of thousands assembled in London on Saturday, 31 March 1990 to voice opposition to the much-hated flat-rate Poll Tax that was not based upon ability to pay. In the weeks leading up to the event there had been 6,000 nationwide protests against it and yet the police refused to redirect the march away from the much smaller Trafalgar Square, which takes around 60,000 people, to Hyde Park. Following the march, during which trouble began after thousands were funnelled into a space that was nowhere near large enough and horses were ridden into a sit-down protest outside Downing Street, a police report suggested there were 40,000 there when it was closer to 300,000. The full findings of a  report by the Home Office and senior police officers on the poll tax riot has never been made public.

According to Foot and Livingstone it is not unusual for the police to underestimate numbers on demonstrations as this then makes it appear that that only the committed, hard core activist have attended and that, consequently, the movement is not a mass one with widespread public support as was clearly the case with the Poll Tax movement.

Other protests examined by the authors including the Battle of the Beanfield at Stonehenge when over 500 travellers were confronted by the police in 1985, the Welling anti-racist protest in 1993 when the police closed off all avenues of escape for a crowd exceeding 60,000, the Kettling of anti-capitalist demonstrators in 2001 and at the G20 Protest in 2009 under New Labour, which had revealed it was happy enough to give the police more powers when it abstained when in opposition to the 1994 Criminal Justice Bill that was aimed at abolishing raves.

Blair’s Labour did not repeal any of the Tory policing laws including those that gave police a vast array of new powers against protestors under the Public Order Act 1986. During its 13 years in government, New Labour brought in a criminal law for every day they were in office. This included one outlawing unauthorised protests near Parliament.

In more recent year’s mass movements have emerged to challenge environmental destruction, racism and sexism and in the last 6-9 months the number of strikes by trade unionists has mushroomed. Extinction Rebellion protestors who engaged in October 2019 in peaceful sit-down protests were confronted with a London-wide ban. The High Court ruled that the blanket ban was unlawful. Earlier in April 2019, 700 Extinction Rebellion protestors were arrested for occupying parts of Oxford Street in an event that was peaceful.

Protest groups such CND have been found to have been listed as potential terrorists by South East Counter Terrorism Police.

According to Livingstone and Foot “this state creep was followed by a move towards totalitarianism with the introduction in 2021 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill, including sweeping provisions that can outlaw any assemblies and processions deemed ‘noisy’ or which might cause ‘serious unease, alarm or distress’.

These draconian measures were introduced by Home Secretary Priti Patel even without consulting the Police Federation. None of which indicates the police are set to uphold the rights to protest as on 13 March 2021 the Met Police unceremoniously cleared a peaceful vigil by hundreds of women who felt unsafe on their streets and were paying their respects to Sarah Everard, who was murdered by a serving Met police office.

A day later the Labour Party, which had abstained on an earlier bill giving spy cops greater immunity to break the law, indicated it would oppose rather than abstain on the Police, Crime and Sentencing and Courts Bill. It was nevertheless voted through by a 96-seat majority (359-263) and it became law on April 28 this year.

Pakistan flooding tragedy inflicted by climate change - Britain and US offer a pittance in aid

 

Pakistan flooding tragedy inflicted by climate change

Britain and US offer a pittance in aid

Trade unionists respond to appeals for help

With several different regions of Pakistan experiencing disasters simultaneously then since June, over 33 million Pakistanis – around 14% of the total population - have been affected by incessant heavier than usual monsoon rains and glacier meltwater - brought on by a severe heat wave - and flooding. 1,600 people are reportedly killed whilst homes and livelihoods of millions have been destroyed in the deadliest floods since 2010. Over 10 million have been made homeless and crops and livestock have been destroyed. Food security is now a major problem.

The floods are a reminder of the horrifying climate future facing billions worldwide as weather systems shift violently, imposing droughts on some regions and overwhelming others in water.

World Bank officials have put the economic damage at some $40 billion, including everything from collapsed bridges and roads to destroyed crops. The response of Britain, which produces 1.3% of global carbon emissions, and the US, which produces 14% of global carbon emissions, in offering £25m and $53 respectively – has been puny especially for what Pakistan’s Minister for Climate Change Sherry Rehman said was a record-breaking climate event that has never been witnessed in the history of the world. Pakistan itself produces just 0.5% of global carbon emissions.

The Building and Wood Workers’ International (BWI), the global union federation of trade unions in the building, wood, forestry and allied industries

The BWI groups together around 350 trade unions, including UNITE, representing around 12 million members in 135 countries. Unite’s Gail Cartmail is one of the BWI vice presidents.

BWI trade union affiliates have provided emergency relief and humanitarian assistance to communities left devastated by the floods and have distributed food supplies, drinking water, basic medicines, clothing and mosquito nets. Unionists have also assisted with the preparation of temporary shelters. 

Trade unionists internationally have financially supported these efforts. Unite community member Tony from Mytholmroyd, West Yorkshire has donated £100. Tony’s home has been flooded on a number of occasions in recent years. “I feel a strong sympathy with Pakistanis who have been left with virtually nothing as a result of recent events. Also, when I was flooded the local Pakistani community were brilliant in providing hot food for residents”. Calderdale TUC is also sending £100.

Ch. Abdul Rehman Aasi, Secretary General, Bhatta Workers Federation (BWF), an affiliate of the BWI in Pakistan expressed gratitude on the global solidarity, "Pakistan experienced one of the worst floods in recent times, a disaster attributed to the phenomena of climate change and affected millions of citizens in the country. Loss of lives and livelihood, damage to crops, housing and key infrastructure caused widespread misery. Our union and local cadre have been on the ground rendering assistance in all possible manner and distributed relief supplies to workers' families. We are grateful for the emergency relief and humanitarian assistance as part of global solidarity extended to us in our hour of crisis."

Meanwhile, Gail Cartmail has reported that “the recent BWI Congress dedicated a major debate to the impact of climate change, especially as felt by the global south and a plan of action will be embedded in the BWI future work plan”.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Donations can be sent to:

 

Bank Name/address :

BANQUE CLER

6-8 Place Longemalle

1204 Genève

Switzerland

SWIFT

BCLRCHBB

 

Bank Account name :

INTERNATIONALE DES TRAVAILLEURS DU BATIMENT ET DU BOIS / IBB

54, route des Acacias,

1227 Carouge

SWITZERLAND

Accounts :

Account Number:  2466062901906 (CHF)

IBAN CH41 0844 0246 6062 9019 0

 

An eye witness account of the Columbian presidential election in the summer of 2022

 

An eye witness account of the Columbian presidential election in the summer of 2022

“I am pleased about the election results and hope they will be respected so that the new Colombian president can make good on promises to boost basic services and pursue a policy of ‘Total Peace’. I am glad to have had the chance to visit Colombia during the elections”.

Michelle Smith, who along with Eddie Cassidy from the Unite Executive Committee, was part of a delegation, organised by Justice for Colombia (J4C), of parliamentarians and trade unionists from Britain and Ireland who visited Colombia between 28 May and 2 June following an appeal from human rights groups and election monitoring bodies for an increased international presence during the Colombian presidential election.

 “I witnessed great enthusiasm in Bogota to vote when the polling booths opened and saw voters provide identification that included having their fingerprints taken and checked against earlier prints that are taken at birth and when seven years old”.

Michelle, an official for the Communication Managers’ Association, was also in the South American Republic to help monitor the current state of trade union and human rights along with the peace deal signed between the Colombian state and the FARC-EP in November 2016.

She admits to being unnerved to see police officers brandishing AK47’s on Bogota street corners and could not but be aware of mass impoverishment as “many people were sleeping under motorway bridges and next to supermarkets and I feared that a number had died as they were not moving.”

Even though it is believed that the official 10% rate is massively underestimated, Colombia has the highest unemployment rate in South America and between 2018 and 2022 levels of inequality rose considerably under President Ivan Duque’s rule.

Which is why Michelle was glad that Gustavo Petro was elected on 19 June with his vice-president the land defender Francia Marquez becoming the first African-Colombian women to hold the post in the new coalition government, the Historic Pact, which had earlier this year in March also won a landmark victory at the legislative elections.  “It received strong backing from young people, women, ethnic minorities, the peace movement and trade unions and social investment is part of its agenda with pledges to make decent education and healthcare more accessible to lower-income Colombians. Developing basic services and infrastructure will seek to reduce poverty. Basic sanitary conditions and clean water remain out of reach in underdeveloped regions, with rural, indigenous and African-Colombian communities particularly affected.”

If the Historic Pact are to make improvements then it is vital that peace agreements are upheld to ensure that paramilitary and guerrilla groups lay down their weapons. For almost half a century Colombia suffered a war in which upwards of 450,000 civilians lost their lives. Following extensive negotiations, which Justice for Colombia played an important role in facilitating, the Colombian government and Farc guerrilla forces agreed to cease violent conflict six years ago.

But Colombia’s former president Iván Duque abandoned this agreement as soon as he took office. The consequences have been devastating and over 1,300 social leaders and peace accord signatories have been assassinated.

“Those killed include close to 40 FENSUAGRO members whilst a number of USO (oil workers) members have also been killed, including regional official Sibares Lamprea in September. Unite has links with both unions and has repeatedly contacted Colombian, British and Irish authorities over anti-trade union violence”, states a passionate Michelle.

Whilst she was in Colombia Michelle, who is from Doncaster, met the families of some of the victims of state violence when she travelled to Puerto Asis, Putumayo to be greeted by people, many of whom were recovering from horrific injuries, “that they had battled against to make a four day journey in order to tell their stories for us to bring to the attention of others across the world. One woman spoke of how without warning the army had opened fire on a communal gathering and had killed eleven people including her husband who she tendered as he died in her arms in an hour-long struggle to stay alive”.

The raid, believed to have been conducted to force people to abandon their homes and land for repossession by large landowners, was celebrated by Duque.  Colombia’s extremely concentrated land ownership ranks among the most unequal in the world and little has been done since 2016 to change this.

Michelle also met during her time in Colombia, former Farc members, who despite constant harassment and the loss of comrades murdered by the state are continuing to make some progress in reintegrating themselves into society by developing co-operative land ventures. “They talked passionately about the Peace agreement”.

In addition, Michelle also met the British Ambassador. She was unimpressed. “When we reported on our travels and meetings and our hopes for the future he just kept asking us what we were going to do?”

In response, the delegation was quite clear that following the signing of a UK trade agreement with Colombia, Peru and Ecuador in 2019 they want the UK, which backed the 2016 Peace Agreement, to include mechanisms to ensure that Colombia makes concrete improvements on Human Rights.

In his inaugural speech, Petro promised his incoming government will bring “true and definitive peace” to Colombia. To do this, he invited historic political opponents to the table to reach a common agreement through which both guerrilla and paramilitary forces will lay down their arms.

Soon after the last active guerrilla force in Colombia, the ELN requested fresh negotiations with the government to lay down their arms. This was followed by a joint letter by dozens of right wing paramilitary forces and drug/criminal cartels who called for a ceasefire to negotiate terms for peace. 

“I am cautiously hopefully that the election of Petro and his new peace process will work out so that he can introduce his necessary social reforms. I’d like to think we helped in some small way by visiting Colombia and I am glad I went. Justice for Columbia are well organised and it was certainly no holiday and it takes a bit of time when you get home to process everything you have witnessed,” said Michelle who will now be seeking to get more Unite branches to affiliate to Justice for Colombia and who is willing to speak at trade union and labour meetings about what she witnessed whilst in South America.

 

Wednesday, 7 December 2022

THE LAST LINE IN THE GROUND - INTERVIEW WITH SHARON GRAHAM, UNITE General Secretary

 THE LAST LINE

IN THE GROUND

Big Issue North Magazine, 28th November to 4 December 

THE LAST LINE IN THE GROUND

 

Unite boss Sharon Graham shares with Mark Metcalf some of the campaigning tactics that have helped the union win double-digit pay rises for its members in a series of successful recent disputes

 

“We are determined that anyone being brave enough to withdraw their labour is not starved back to work.”

 

 Sharon Graham, the first woman to be general secretary of Unite, the UK’s largest trade union, is passionate about ensuring her members and workers generally do not become the victims of the cost-of-living crisis.

 

This has led to a willingness to lead her members into strike action when negotiations with employers have failed, with over 90,000 withdrawing their labour in the last 12 months. The result has been spectacular successes, such as double-digit pay increases at Stagecoach Buses in Hull and on Liverpool Docks.

 

But these wins are not just the result of strength of will. A rigorous approach to research and campaigning – pioneered by Graham – and a sound financial footing have been equally or more important.

 

Graham calls this approach “leveraging”. She says: “We look at companies as a whole so that when we need to have campaigns the employer knows we can affect their business. Using accountants, economists and investigative researchers we intensively look at their directors, shareholders, clients, suppliers, creditors, possible future clients, emerging markets, political structures where they are based and communities where they operate.” 

 

Share prices and their possible volatility during a dispute are also considered.  

 

Pressure is then applied on the companies, many of whom are major multinationals in which key decisions are taken overseas, through a variety of options including “adverts, briefings and strikes”. These leverage campaigns worried one Conservative party figure enough to be called “sinister”.

 

In 2020, for example, Unite determined that BA was using Covid as an excuse for its plan to hire and rehire 42,000 staff on worse conditions. It highlighted that IAG, BA’s parent company, was not in any threat of insolvency because it sat on assets and reserves that could see it through the crisis without the need for permanent cuts or redundancies. And it wrote to members of the board of IAG, copied to Willie Walsh, IAG CEO and Luis Gallego Martín, chairman and CEO of Iberia, BA’s sister company, to make its point. Ultimately BA’s then CEO Alex Ctriz agreed, saying: “There is no need for British Airways to lay off cabin crew and then rehire them on inferior terms.”

 

Earlier Unite took similarly sophisticated and successful approaches to a union derecognition dispute against Yorkshire Ambulance Service and the victimisation of a senior union rep at Honda. That brought not only his reinstatement but an additional 1,000 members at the Swindon plant to boot.

 

Unite can fund disputes because over a decade ago it established a strike fund that is now worth £30 million. Other unions such as the RMT and CWU, both of whose members have engaged in long-running strikes this year, are unable to provide much financial support to those walking out.

 

“We are determined that anyone being brave enough to withdraw their labour is not starved back to work. I upped the daily strike rates to £70 when I became general secretary.” says Graham. 

 

These funds have facilitated action by over 450 groups of Unite members against their employers in the last year. “We have won 81 per cent of them and put £200 million into members’ pockets. I feel privileged to have participated in these victories that include, in some cases, double digit rises.”

 

Born in 1968 in London, Graham, who has strong North East connections, became aware at a very early age of the exploitation working people can suffer when she heard about the death of her uncle in 1921.

 

“He broke his back working as a miner in County Durham,” she says. “He left a wife and three children to live out their lives in poverty.

 

“The employer admitted liability and paid out just £300, equivalent to £15,000 today. I thought, they took away his life – how could that happen?”

 

Graham left school in Hammersmith at 16 in the mid-1980s to start work as a waitress. She was inspired by everything from Robert Trussell’s book The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists to the Dagenham Ford women sewing machinists she calls “heroes” for their successful strike in 1968 that led to the passing of the 1970 Equal Pay Act. Within a year she had led a successful strike in defence of casual workers’ rights that won equal pay.

Overall though, the 1980s were not a period when collective organisation was successful, with defeats for, among others, the miners, print workers and dockers. Trade union membership, which peaked at over 13 million at the end of the 1970s, collapsed and is now under half that figure. Workers became reluctant to take strike action, preferring to bargain for a better deal while staying at work. Since then, and particularly since the economic crisis of 2008, wages have fallen and rapidly rising prices are now hurting millions. 

 

After attending the Trades Union Congress Organising Academy at 27, Graham was employed by the TGWU, which merged with Amicus to become Unite in 2007. Its members come from sectors including construction, manufacturing, transport, and logistics.

 

Graham became head of Unite’s organising department and built a large following, which later helped her defeat the strong favourite Steve Turner at last year’s general secretary elections. 

 

“I believed I was saying something very different to what had been said previously,” she says. “We were talking the language of the workers and what they needed was for the union to refocus on jobs, pay and conditions, and by winning for workers this would give them confidence to ultimately change the political centre ground.”

 

Earlier this month Unite secured a pay rise of 20 per cent over the next two years after 250 bus drivers went on strike for a month. Graham is especially pleased for the Hull workers, who she felt were being exploited for living in a low wage area. Unite, which has led a series of productive bus workers disputes this year, successfully sought parity with terms and conditions elsewhere. 

 

At Liverpool Docks nearly eight weeks of strike action has also won rises of 14-18 per cent for dockers there, depending on their grades.

 

Other ongoing disputes where pay is an issue include food manufacturer Quorn in Billingham, Co Durham, where Graham is set to attend the 24/7 picket line. “Nothing will ever be as powerful as workers withdrawing their labour and a properly organised picket line is key,” says Graham, who contends that it is only when workers take action that it becomes clear to the public that they are essential to the functioning of the economy. 

 

But won’t pushing up wages lead to more pain in the future due to “wage-push inflation” – as the government has argued in its attempts to persuade workers not to take strike action – in which resulting price rises lead to ever more demands for higher pay? 

 

Not so, argues Graham. “Our Unite investigative approach has shown that this second wave of inflationary pressures has been driven by excessive profits, not wage rises. All Unite members want is a fair share of what they have earned for their employers.” 

 

Meanwhile, Unite, in a strategy that breaks with tradition, has transferred some of its political funds away from the Labour Party into a new campaign that takes the union closer to working with its grassroots members. 

 

Some of Graham’s predecessors played a major role in the Labour Party. Len McCluskey provided significant support for Jeremy Corbyn when he was elected leader in 2015. Millions were spent supporting Labour, which nevertheless lost badly at the 2019 general election. Graham does not want to play such a role in the party. This may give her a chance to be more critical of a future Keir Starmer government. 

 

“We have launched Unite for a Workers’ Economy, which seeks to use our power in workplaces whilst also organising in our communities to develop a workers’ manifesto to drive the political agenda,” says Graham. 

 

To help do this Unite is looking to open community bases in northern communities and is targeting Grimsby, Hull, Workington, Barrow in Furness, Leigh and Morecambe for special attention. It already has thousands of non-working members who pay a nominal fee to become community members. 

 

“Politicians do not lead – they follow. In order to get a better deal for workers and communities we need to shift the centre ground to show what voters want. For example, pensioner poverty as a whole is linked to the demise of occupational pensions, which we are defending in workplaces and trying to reopen in others and which we want to see fought for more generally. We are not doing this through lobbies but by doing the five miles of organising.” 

 

On food poverty, Unite campaigning will highlight how it is linked to low wages, meaning many people have to claim Universal Credit and use food banks. “Why is it acceptable that a number of these people work for supermarkets that make massive profits and as such are being subsidised by the taxpayer?” asks Graham.

 

On the political front Graham has attacked the government for introducing the Covert Human Intelligence Sources Act, which makes it lawful for undercover police officers to spy on trade unionists if they believe they are engaging in actions that are “damaging the economic welfare of the country”. 

 

Clearly, taking industrial action is aimed at causing economic damage in order to force employers to negotiate a deal that is satisfactory to both parties. 

 

“We know Spy Cops collected information on building workers that was used to blacklist them so that they had to move to other sectors of the economy,” says Graham. “Good activists were victimised and while Unite has won many cases of compensation it was wrong and we need to stop it happening in the future so that workers can organise collectively to be properly rewarded for their work.”  

 

With the government seemingly intent on passing more anti-trade union laws, Graham, who believes she can’t stop the legislation because Rishi Sunak’s party has an 80-seat majority, is focused “on how we can overcome any hurdles parked in front of us, including if they attack strike pay, to put our members in the best position to win. We are the last line in the ground for many people.”